Exfoliating Body Polish Crushed Macadamia & Rice Milk
Luxe Scrub at Drugstore Prices
Pros & cons.
- +Rounded hydrated silica particles exfoliate effectively without creating micro-tears in skin
- +Macadamia oil's high palmitoleic acid content mimics natural sebum for superior skin conditioning
- +Rich, warm nutty scent makes the exfoliation experience genuinely enjoyable
- +Dove's 1/4 moisturizing cream base means skin feels softer, not stripped, after use
- +Excellent for managing keratosis pilaris and rough texture on arms and legs
- +Outstanding value at $8 for 10.5 oz — lasts 6-8 weeks with 2-3 times weekly use
- +Rice bran extract and nonfat dry milk add subtle chemical exfoliation and brightening
- −Contains fragrance, sodium laureth sulfate, and animal-derived ingredients — not suitable for sensitive, vegan, or dairy-allergic consumers
- −Jar packaging with screw lid is slippery and inconvenient in the shower
- −Too gentle for very thick calluses or severely rough skin that needs intensive exfoliation
- −Not formulated for facial use — body skin only
- −Nonfat dry milk is a potential allergen for dairy-sensitive individuals
The full review.
There’s a deeply satisfying illusion in body scrubs: the rougher it feels, the better it must be working. Your brain rewards the scratching sensation with a sense of accomplishment, like the skin equivalent of that squeaky-clean feeling that actually means your face wash is too harsh. The Dove Exfoliating Body Polish rejects this premise entirely, and your skin is better for it.
This scrub arrived in 2018 as part of Dove’s body polish lineup, and the Macadamia & Rice Milk variant quickly became the fan favorite — not because it’s the most aggressive exfoliant on the shelf, but because it’s the most pleasant to use. The scent alone does a significant amount of the emotional heavy lifting. Warm, nutty, gently sweet — it smells like a macadamia cookie baking in a kitchen where someone is also steaming rice milk. It’s the kind of scent that makes you linger in the shower an extra minute, which, considering the exfoliating purpose, is actually a functional benefit.
The formula builds on Dove’s signature 1/4 moisturizing cream technology — the same stearic acid-based emollient matrix that makes the Beauty Bar feel different from soap. In this context, it creates a thick, creamy base that suspends hydrated silica particles in a cushion of conditioning ingredients. The silica particles are rounded rather than angular, which matters more than most people realize. Irregular-edged exfoliants like crushed walnut shells or sugar crystals can create micro-tears in the skin surface, compromising the barrier and potentially causing irritation. Rounded silica rolls across the skin, mechanically dislodging dead cells through gentle friction without cutting or scratching.
The macadamia oil is a genuinely thoughtful ingredient choice, not just a fragrance tie-in. Macadamia ternifolia seed oil is unusually rich in palmitoleic acid — a fatty acid that decreases in human skin as we age and that closely mimics the composition of natural sebum. This biocompatibility means the oil absorbs into the skin rather than sitting on top, providing conditioning that feels integrated rather than greasy. When you rinse off this scrub, your skin doesn’t feel coated — it feels like itself, but softer and smoother.
The rice components pull double duty. Rice germ oil contributes vitamin E and gamma-oryzanol, an antioxidant compound unique to rice that has demonstrated anti-inflammatory and UV-protective properties in studies. Rice bran extract adds soothing polysaccharides and a subtle brightening effect. The nonfat dry milk rounds out the conditioning complex with lactic acid — a gentle alpha-hydroxy acid that adds a chemical exfoliation layer beneath the physical scrubbing.
In use, the texture is immediately satisfying. It’s thick enough that a palmful doesn’t slide off wet skin, and the silica particles are fine enough to feel productive without feeling abrasive. The sweet spot is moderate pressure in circular motions — the formula is designed to do the work, not your muscles. Spend extra time on chronically rough areas: elbows, knees, heels, upper arms. The KP-prone areas of the upper arms and thighs respond particularly well to the combination of physical and mild chemical exfoliation.
After rinsing, the payoff is immediate and obvious. Skin feels genuinely polished — smooth, slightly dewy from the residual oils, and noticeably softer than it did five minutes ago. There’s no tightness, no dryness, no sense that you’ve stripped away something important. This is the Dove philosophy in scrub form: take away the dead stuff, leave behind something better.
The limitations are minor but worth noting. The jar packaging is functional but not shower-friendly — slippery hands and a screw lid don’t mix well. The formula contains sodium laureth sulfate, which purists will object to, and added fragrance that sensitive skin may react to. The sodium tallowate and nonfat dry milk make this unsuitable for vegans and those with dairy allergies.
At eight dollars for ten and a half ounces — with a fifteen-ounce size offering even better value — this is one of the most enjoyable skincare experiences available at a drugstore price point. Used two to three times per week, a jar lasts six to eight weeks, making the per-use cost trivially small for results that genuinely rival spa-quality body polishes.
This isn’t the scrub for people who want to sand off a layer of skin and call it self-care. It’s for people who understand that effective exfoliation is a conversation with your skin, not an argument.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Water (Aqua), Glycerin, Hydrated Silica, Sodium Lauroyl Isethionate, Stearic Acid, Sodium Stearate, Fragrance (Parfum), Macadamia Ternifolia Seed Oil, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Germ Oil, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Extract, Cocamidopropyl Betaine, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, Lauric Acid, Cetearyl Alcohol, Sodium Tallowate, Synthetic Wax, Sodium Isethionate, Phenoxyethanol, Hydroxyacetophenone, Sodium Cocoate, Tetrasodium EDTA, Tetrasodium Etidronate, Nonfat Dry Milk, Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Iron Oxides (CI 77492), Iron Oxides (CI 77499), Iron Oxides (CI 77491), Titanium Dioxide (CI 77891)
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
Physical exfoliation works by mechanically breaking desmosomal connections between corneocytes in the outermost stratum corneum. This removes dead cells that cause roughness, dullness, and uneven texture. Particle morphology—the shape and edge characteristics of the exfoliating agent—determines exfoliation safety.
Research in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology shows spherical or rounded particles cause less epidermal disruption than angular or irregular particles. The hydrated silica in this formula is rounded, providing effective desquamation without the micro-abrasion risk of crushed nut shells, pumice, or crystalline scrubs.
Macadamia oil has a unique fatty acid profile of approximately 20-25% palmitoleic acid, making it a highly skin-compatible plant oil. Palmitoleic acid is a component of human sebum that decreases with age. Studies in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science show topical application improves skin barrier function and reduces transepidermal water loss.
Gamma-oryzanol, the primary antioxidant in rice bran oil, has anti-inflammatory and UV-absorptive properties. A study in Phytotherapy Research confirmed oryzanol-rich rice bran extracts reduce oxidative stress markers in skin tissue, which supports the soothing and protective claims for the rice-based ingredients in this formula.
Nonfat dry milk provides trace amounts of lactic acid, an alpha-hydroxy acid that adds mild chemical keratolysis to the physical exfoliation. At the low concentrations in a rinse-off product, the lactic acid primarily contributes to the smoothing effect rather than exfoliation depth.
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists generally recommend moderate physical exfoliation 2-3 times per week for body skin. They emphasize choosing products with rounded, uniform particles over irregular or sharp-edged exfoliants. Board-certified dermatologists note that combining physical exfoliation with conditioning oils in this formula follows best practices for maintaining skin barrier integrity. For patients with keratosis pilaris, dermatologists often recommend gentle physical exfoliation alongside chemical exfoliants like urea or lactic acid lotions. Dermatologists view the moisturizing cream base in this Dove polish favorably, especially after seeing patients damage their barrier with aggressive scrubs.
Where it fits in your routine.
Use in the shower on wet skin 2-3 times per week. Scoop a large amount and apply to damp body skin using gentle circular motions. Focus on rough areas like elbows, knees, upper arms, and heels. Massage each area for 30-60 seconds so the cream base and oils work into the skin. Rinse well with warm water. Apply a body moisturizer to damp skin for maximum softness, though the built-in conditioning makes additional moisturizer unnecessary for many users. Do not use on broken, irritated, or freshly shaved skin.
At $7.99 for 10.5 ounces (with a 15 oz size offering a lower per-ounce rate), this body polish provides spa-quality exfoliation at a drugstore price. The macadamia oil and rice milk conditioning ingredients are premium for this price bracket; most scrubs under $10 use basic sugar or salt in mineral oil. Using it 2-3 times per week makes a jar last 6-8 weeks, with a per-use cost of approximately $0.40-0.55. Comparable botanical body polishes from spa and prestige brands usually cost $25-40 for similar sizes and use less sophisticated exfoliation technology.
Use this for effective, gentle body exfoliation that conditions skin instead of stripping it. It works for keratosis pilaris, dry rough patches, or dull body skin. It prepares skin for self-tanning. It offers a high-end shower experience at a lower price.
Vegans and those with dairy allergies should avoid this product because it contains sodium tallowate and nonfat dry milk. Fragrance and SLES require caution for sensitive skin or active eczema. People needing aggressive exfoliation for thick calluses need a heavier scrub. Do not use on the face.
Product details.
Warm, nutty, slightly sweet fragrance smells like roasted macadamia and creamy milk. This scent is a standout feature—thick and indulgent but not cloying or perfumey. It lingers subtly on skin after rinsing.
Round plastic tub with a screw-on lid. The jar format makes scooping easy but gets slippery with wet hands in the shower. It comes in 10.5 oz and 15 oz sizes. The larger size has better per-ounce value.
The first scoop shows a thick, cream-textured scrub that feels better than its price suggests. Application is pleasant — the silica exfoliates without scratching. Rinsing leaves skin noticeably softer and smoother with a subtle sheen from the macadamia and rice oils. There is no tightness or dryness — only polished, conditioned skin.
6-8 weeks with 2-3 times weekly use on full body
12 months
All Year
The backstory.
Dove entered the body scrub market in 2018 with a clear differentiator: their scrubs would exfoliate without the skin-stripping aftermath. While competitors focused on aggressive exfoliation — bigger particles, rougher textures — Dove built their polishes on the same gentleness-first philosophy that made the Beauty Bar famous. The Macadamia & Rice Milk variant became the line's standout, winning over consumers who'd been burned by harsher scrubs that left skin feeling raw.
About Dove
Legacy Brand (20+ years)Dove has been a household personal care brand since 1957, known for its 1/4 moisturizing cream technology. The Exfoliating Body Polish line applies the same gentleness-first philosophy used for the Beauty Bar to the body scrub category.
Common myths.
Rougher body scrubs exfoliate better than gentle ones.
Exfoliation efficiency depends on particle shape and technique, not just grit intensity. Rounded particles, such as the hydrated silica in this formula, remove dead skin without creating micro-tears in the skin surface. Aggressive scrubs with irregular particles damage the skin barrier and trigger inflammation.
You need to exfoliate your body every day for smooth skin.
Over-exfoliation strips the skin's protective barrier, causing dryness, irritation, and higher sensitivity. Most skin types need 2-3 times per week for optimal cell turnover without damaging barrier function. This scrub's moderate exfoliation level matches this frequency.
What the community says.
"Skin feels incredibly soft and smooth after use"
"Creamy texture with just the right amount of grit"
"Warm nutty scent is luxurious without being overpowering"
"Doesn't leave skin feeling stripped or dry"
"Excellent value — jar lasts a long time"
"Contains fragrance which may irritate sensitive skin"
"Not vegan due to nonfat dry milk and sodium tallowate"
"Jar packaging is slippery and inconvenient in the shower"
"Too gentle for very rough, calloused skin"